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People First and Toronto’s G20 summit

I spent two days in Toronto on June 26-27 during the G20 summit of world political leaders. I was doing communications-related work for a peaceful rally and march organized by labour and citizensâ€™ groups (including some churches) on Saturday. It was a day that was to turn nasty late in the afternoon when a small group of people began to commit acts of vandalism. I took the photo shown here on Queen Street while upwards of 30 thousand people were marching peacefully in the rain. In the left corner of the frame, a young girl walks carrying an umbrella and behind her a man holds the hand of his female companion. In the centre is a banner that says people should come before profits and that public services essential to citizens must be protected. There are also people carrying flags identifying their unions â€“ the Public Service Alliance of Canada, the Service Employees International Union and others.

The People First rally began in the pouring rain at Queenâ€™s Park, Ontarioâ€™s parliament building. A group of dark-clad police officers were ranged in front of the entrance. They treated any demonstrators who came near to them in a friendly but non-committal manner. The eventâ€™s sponsoring organizations included the Canadian Labour Congress, the Ontario Federation of Labour, the Council of Canadians, Greenpeace and the Canadian Federation of Students. The march began after about 30 minutes of introductions and speeches. The route was to take about 90 minutes, although it was awhile before the crowd of thousands could file its way into the street.

The economic crisis

The G20 leaders were in Toronto to discuss how the worldâ€™s countries can emerge from the global economic crisis. The message, at least from labour groups, is that the crisis was triggered by the reckless behaviour and in some cases the corrupt practices of some of the worldâ€™s largest private financial institutions. The fallout from bank failures and corporate bankruptcies has created widespread unemployment, and the crisis will not end until the unemployed can find good jobs once again. For that to happen, governments must continue to provide economic stimulus in the short and medium term. They should not plan, as Canadaâ€™s Conservative government wants, to chop public services and safety nets that citizens need now more than ever. So there was a lot to discuss and debate.

As I flew into Toronto late at night on June 25, I saw the huge jet planes of each of the leaders parked on a floodlit airport runway. The summit occurred in a densely populated downtown area, its perimeter heavily fortified by a high fence. The corporate sector and its lobbyists have good access to politicians and bureaucrats but most other organizations, including unions, often have to make their case through popular actions including public events. In Canada, these demonstrations have a long history of being peaceful.

People First rally and march

I remained near the back end of the People First march as it left Queenâ€™s Park and headed south toward Queen Street â€“ a number of blocks to the north of the security perimeter established by police to protect the location of the summit. In fact, organizers of the march had worked out their route in cooperation with the police. At Queen Street, one of Torontoâ€™s busiest, lined with shops and restaurants, the march turned west toward Spadina, where it turned north again and began to make its way back toward its Queenâ€™s Park origin. The atmosphere along the route was relaxed and almost festive, although the rain made it soggy. Some shops and restaurants had closed for the day but many remained open. I stopped in briefly at a Tim Hortons to use the washroom and buy a cup of coffee. The manager told me they had been having a busy day.

Police had blocked off the streets to all vehicles and were present on every street corner to enforce that prohibition. They were also out in numbers at the intersection of any street running south of Queen toward the area where the G20 summit was occurring. At some intersections the first line of defence was a phalanx of officers standing beside their bicycles and wearing yellow rain slickers. Others backed them up, dark-suited, wearing helmets with face guards and carrying shields and truncheons. And behind them, in some cases, were other police on horseback.

I saw no incidents as I walked the entire route and took photos. Back at Queenâ€™s Park, there was some music after the march and a few speeches, but it was raining again and most of the people who had returned soon dispersed. Those from unions who had arrived on buses got back onto them and headed home. I felt that my working day was done so I walked out of the area to look for a pasta restaurant and later took a cab back to my hotel in north Toronto. Once in my room, I turned on the television expecting to see news of what the G20 leaders were discussing. Instead, I saw images of an overturned police car in flames, of black-clad vandals breaking shop windows with hammers and lines of riot police beating batons against their plastic shields and shouting â€œback up.â€

Street vandalism

News reports indicated that a small band of perhaps 60 to 100 self-styled Black Bloc individuals had used the large, peaceful demonstration for cover. At some point well along the route of the march, they left it and retraced their steps along Queen Street. They began to commit acts of vandalism and attempted to probe the lines of police protecting the perimeter of the G20 summit area. This confrontation was â€“ much like tropical storms and other natural disasters â€“ an event made for television. The images, often repeated, of black-clad individuals, almost exclusively males, confronting police and smashing windows dominated local television news on Saturday night. There were more skirmishes on Sunday morning and by the time I left the city in mid-afternoon more than 600 people had been arrested. That number has now risen to an estimated 900, almost double the number arrested during the October Crisis in 1970, and it represents a blatant overreaction by police.

There is an odd symbiosis between those who plan security, those who try to break it and those journalists who report on it. Prime Minister Harper, who has been justly criticized for the runaway $1.3 billion cost of the summit, used his concluding summit news conference to say that the cost of security was justified by the vandalism that occurred in Toronto.

I have no respect for the small groups of provocateurs who appear on cue wherever summits are held and use the cover provided by peaceful protest groups until they unleash their mindless vandalism. I have yet to hear any them offer an articulate and justified defence of their actions. It is also possible, however, that police themselves deliberately instigated some of the mayhem. During a protest at a North American leaders summit in Montebello, Quebec in 2007, union leaders exposed three Quebec provincial police officers who had disguised themselves as demonstrators and were attempting to provoke the crowd and instigate violence. Any investigation into events on the streets of Toronto must examine that possibility.
Naked display for force

I had felt a growing sense of unease, even revulsion, in the weeks leading up to the summit, fed by the incessant talk of security precautions, the police presence, and the fencing off and closing down of the heart of central Toronto. The military style preparations were a prescient reminder that Canada, too, has its own security apparatus that can be deployed in a manner reminiscent of China, Russia, the United States and dictatorships too numerous to mention. I feel even more uncomfortable now, following the naked display of police force in the streets of Toronto.

There are those who believe that all forms of public protest are illegitimate but they are wrong. Giving public voice to important concerns is a precious right and we would be serfs without that freedom. India would not have achieved independence or American blacks their civil rights without Martin Luther King and without Gandhi. Workers would not have won pensions, paid vacation and a regulated workweek without strikes and public engagement. There was legitimate and peaceful protest in Toronto around the G20 summit. There was also mindless vandalism. The two are not the same.

6 thoughts on “People First and Toronto’s G20 summit”

Thanks, Dennis, for this first-hand observer account. The images of this event have been so distorted in conventional media, that we are in urgent need of eye-witness reports like this — engaged but also critical.

Excellent Dennis. Thank you. As I watched some of the police forces moving on the small groups of citizens, they looked like an advancing army. I even saw a “V” formation that appeared almost Napoleonic, with policemen on horseback in the first line.

It was very disturbing and so difficult to accept that it was happening in Canada.

Thank you, Dennis, for giving us the view that the main stream media failed to give us. Instead, they repeated again and again the vandalism. I thought that the over-reaction of CTV might even have contributed to the police feeling they had to be tougher on Day two. CTV had a commentator who kept saying “where are the police? Why aren’t they stopping this?”

The police cars were left with doors open for a considerable period of time, according to witnesses. One has to wonder if this was an invitation, similar to the provocateurs in Quebec.

The cops were not smart
but old and jaded enough to know
how to lead zealots by the nose
of their righteousness and rage.

They Trojan Horse gifted them
the irresistibly delicious storefronts of Queen St. and Yonge,
far from the real fences and gates.
Juicy soft Starbucks and Scotiabank targets
then threw in plump cop cars, as bait.

O, and the zealots did their duty,
instinctively,
like dogs chasing a frightened thing,
smashing and burning and breaking,
setting the fattened decoys ablaze.

And so,
like dominoes,
inexorable links in a causal chain,
like moths to flame –
havoc junkies,
conjurers of emergencies –
the press descended like rain.
Like flies to shit
they must cover it,
there were ten cameramen
to every one â€˜hooliganâ€™,
and their chattering clicking snapped the trap shut.

Rather than 10,000 clearly protesting the G20 peacefully,
or the issues of climate debt, or maternal health care, or global poverty
being heard or viewed,
the cops and the zealots and the media collude:
today itâ€™s a burning cop car
on the cover of The Star.

Isn’t it ironic that the elected G20 leaders have to hide behind a billion dollars of “security” to enact the policies of Herbert Hoover, while the Queen is openly amongst the people. And after calling for cutbacks and austerity “because the markets demand it” the stock markets have fallen by over 500 points so far this week.